Skip to main content

WHAT IS FREE IN ICELAND?

Needless to say, Iceland is an expensive country with expensive services. If you're coming as a tourist, you should expect to pay a lot of money during your stay. However, there are some extra services you can get for free.

Thinking back over our trips to Iceland, we have received a total of twelve times things as gifts, completely free of charge, which we hadn't expected. You can find out what they were here:

1. Cat roommate for free

On our first trip to Iceland, we booked an Airbnb apartment in the basement of a family home in the small town of Akranes, West Iceland. We were greeted on arrival by a ginger Persian cat who showed us the way in and spent the next few days with us. We don't know where he came from, but he was a very kind and grateful companion, we loved him so much. After that, we had several more " visiting" cats as our housemates during our later tours to Olafsfjördur, Reykjavík, Drangsnes and Árnessýslu.

2. Free farm visit

During our winter tour of Iceland, our host showed us the farm animals (horses, sheep, cows, dogs) of Rauduskridur farm and allowed us to participate in feeding. If you book a farm stay in Iceland, you can get a closer look at farm life if the host agrees to show you around.

3. Free water and coffee in some restaurants

Our favourite restaurant Seabaron offers the best lobster soup and grilled fish at fair prices in the capital. Water is free with your meal, and for coffee, you have to buy a cup and then you can refill it for free. We have seen similar experiences at petrol stations.

4. Petting and photographing Icelandic horses

Driving around Iceland, you'll see horse farms along the roads, where you can stop to take photos and pet horses.

5. Whale watching for free

In Husavík in August 2021, we participated in a successful whale-watching trip organised by North Sailing. After the tour, we drove around the Skjálfandi Bay area north of the town. At Öxarfjördur beach viewpoint and at Cliff viewpoint we had the pleasure to observe and track the whale we had seen earlier. If you can't afford whale watching, you can watch the whales swimming in the bay for free from these points. You can also watch seabirds nesting on the rock wall.

6. Unlimited aurora hunting

The accommodation for our 2021 Christmas trip to Iceland was Laekjarholt guesthouse near Hella, in the middle of nowhere. The little cottage was a great place to see the aurora borealis, and we managed to see and photograph this amazing phenomenon four times during the week we stayed there. If you want to see the aurora borealis, the cheapest way is to rent a cabin in the countryside, where you can hunt for free and unlimited.

7. Free tasting in the capital on Meat Soup Day

On the first day of winter, Reykjavík's city centre hosts a national meat soup (kjötsupa) day, with several restaurants on Skólavörðustígur street giving away free soup to passers-by. The exact date varies from year to year, according to the Old Norse Calendar, usually between 21 and 27 October.

8. Cats everywhere

In the streets of downtown Reykjavík, you'll meet friendly cats in many places. Baktus, who has a large number of social media followers, lives in Gyllti Kötturinn clothes shop, you can admire Negull, the beautiful Bengal cat in Hjarta Reykjavikur art shop or meet Ofelia, the famous cat in Icemart shop, who is mostly naps on the blankets by the entrance. Many other cat celebrities are living in the capital, and you can read about them in a separate post.

9. City Hall tourist information, toilets, 3D map

The Reykjavík City Hall on the shores of Lake Tjörnin is well worth a visit. You can use the toilets during opening hours, get help looking for something at the tourist information desk and admire a three-dimensional map of Iceland.

10. Free city parking

Free parking is available everywhere in the capital from 4 pm on Saturday until Monday morning.

11. Akureyri Botanical Garden

Akureyri, the 'capital' of North Iceland, near the Arctic Circle, has its own botanical garden. The gardens are beautifully designed, and well-kept, with many flowering plants, ponds and trees, and are well worth a visit. The garden is open all year round and can be visited without an entrance fee.

12. Community fridge (freedge)

In Iceland, there are 5 community fridges with freely available food: 3 in the capital, 1 in Akureyri City Library and 1 in Höfn.

The initiative was set up so that people who have food left over don't have to throw it away and those who would like to eat it can get it for free. You can keep track of what is in the fridge in Facebook groups.

It's not really a service for tourists, but if you don't have any food, you can use the service and if you have any food left over at the end of your trip to Iceland that you can't or don't want to take home, you can put it in the freedge.

(Photos: pictures from the fridge in Akureyri, downloaded from Facebook)


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

TEIDE VOLCANO TOUR IN TENERIFE

First of February, we completed this wonderful tour by car to the car park, then by cable car to the upper station, and then on foot to the La Fortaleza viewpoint. It was a nice short walk in the sunny and chilly weather, minus 1 at the peak (24-25 Celsius on the beaches at the same time). If you plan to visit Teide volcano, 3718 m high, you can choose from several options. You can book an organized tour, even at night, in which case there is nothing special to do, the organizer will arrange everything. If you organize yourself, you can reach the free car park at an altitude of 2300 meters, where your car must be parked. You can choose to go by cable car from here, with a ticket buying at the station or buy online before travel (it is advisable to buy a ticket online in advance for the given date and time), the return ticket price is 37 EUR for 1 adult and 18.50 EUR for a child aged 3-13 (prices in 2022). From the parking lot, it is also possible to continue on a hiking trail, it is re...

FIRST TRIP TO ICELAND - ADVICE FOR BEGINNERS

Since 2018 we have been frequent travellers. After discovering England, our first foreign trip was to Iceland. Despite the October weather not being too kind to us, we had a wonderful experience and fell in love with the country. We felt that we had to return. Since then it has been the only place we visit regularly, several times a year. With our experience and knowledge of the place, we try to provide useful answers to the questions of newbie travellers planning their first trip to Iceland: - where to go for the first time, - what to see, - how long to stay and when to go, - what to look out for when organising your trip, - what preparations are necessary, - what to take with you, - is it advisable to organise it yourself or should you use a travel agency? Iceland is a very safe country, with high-quality services, great hospitality and professionalism, so we can organise the tour ourselves. From home, we can book flights, select and book accommodation, car rental, buy entrance tic...

DRIVING BY CAR IN ICELAND, OUR EXPERIENCES IN AUTUMN

  First visit to Iceland with a Dacia Sandero, avoiding the F-roads At the end of October 2018, we spent 5 days in Iceland for the first time and rented a Dacia Sandero from Goldcar for our day trips. We were very satisfied with the car and the rental service. The rental contains some insurance (for example Collision damage waiver (CDW), Theft waiver (TW), Third party liability protection (TP),…) but your liability is the deposit. So in any issue, you will lose the part or the full deposit, which is terrible. But if you want to sleep well you can purchase a car and hire excess insurance which can protect your deposit and cover the first part of any claim (known as the "excess"). We planned trips to Snaefellsness peninsula, Reykjanes-peninsula, Geysir-Gullfoss-Thingvellír, South Iceland (Vík, Solheimasandur, Skogafoss) and Akranes (where we rent a flat), so we drove on main roads, avoiding the F-roads, this is why we chose a smaller 2WD car which was perfect and the cheapest o...